Saturday, May 09, 2015

I want to wish all you mother's out there as well as those who have gone before us a Happy Mother's Day. My gift to you is a FREE ecopy of Angels In Red. You can download HERE on Amazon.

Angels In RedTwo very different worlds collide the day Jack saves Jenna from a near death experience. The fact Jack has isolated himself in a cabin in the middle of nowhere, or that Jenna is the daughter of one of the country’s wealthiest men, never comes into play as they fall deeply, and passionately in love. Their happy-ever-after is interrupted when Jenna is called home to say her final good-bye to her father on his death bed. Will Jack lose her to the allure of high society she’s accustomed to? Does the discovery of her deceased mother’s well-kept secret keep her in a world where money and status can and does buy anything? Or does she learn the one thing she wants most in life money can’t buy.

Wednesday, February 04, 2015

You can only see so many Camel humps, right?
Getting OVER the hump is what's important.
So how about something new? Anything that will propel you toward Friday at a good speed. Do you have any idea how many camels it would take to keep everybody humpin' on Wednesdays? Phew!

I got it!!

Wet & Wild Wednesday

Post a pic you feel is Wet & Wild with the hashtag #WWW and lets see what we all can come up with!
I'll go first!

Friday, January 16, 2015

A lover whose relationship got too complex. I initially came across this photo on http://mhatter99.hubpages.com and pinned it to my Let it Rain board. I added the following quote from Longfellow.Longfellow - -" Be still sad heart and cease repining; Behind the clouds the sun is shining, Thy fate is the common fate of all, Into each life a little rain must fall, Some days must be dark and dreary."This photo on My Pinterest Boards. has generated 251 repins and 67 ♥ Why is that? I'm curious as to why you feel this photo is repinned at least half a dozen times a day over the past couple of months. What makes this so special? Is it the photo itself, or does the quote from Longfellow compliment it perfectly?